In a recent discussion with Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer senior international policy advisor and former Ambassador to Brazil, Thomas A. Shannon Jr., the growing concern among US corporations about the national security implications concerning China potentially opening a spying base in Cuba became evident.
Shannon shared that companies are just starting to look into worst-case scenarios related to their operations in China. He remarked, “What we’re finding is that companies are increasingly interested in understanding the relationship between the U.S. and China and where it could be headed. They are looking for ways to navigate around the existing sanctions and tariffs that the United States and China have thrown up at each other.”
This underscores a heightened level of strategic risk mitigation at the intersection of law and politics, as major corporations aim to better understand the shifting geopolitical landscape, especially between the U.S. and China.
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